How Twitter is destroying journalism
While Twitter is useful to pop stars and journalists in marketing their work, in political discourse it inevitably skews left.
While Twitter is useful to pop stars and journalists in marketing their work, in political discourse it inevitably skews left.
Elliot Hannay tracks some of the most important stories of modern Australia while maintaining a sense of the ridiculous
Dan Andrews chose to lock down Victoria hardest of all, but he also let private security firms monitor hotel quarantine.
Once-sober media organisations now prefer panic to accurate and sceptical reporting.
The ABC’s board and management have not made the sort of tough decisions media companies around the world have had to make.
Today’s journalism, teaching and higher education are all too far to the left of public opinion.
A life lost in custody is apparently a more worthy cause than the ones lost to black-on-black violence in Aboriginal communities.
Black lives do matter but the fact in the US is those lives have been improving.
Many journalists seem unable to understand economics in a media environment dominated by victim advocacy.
Annastacia Palaszczuk’s dangerous political game ahead of the October Queensland election has been laid bare by the media.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/chris-mitchell/page/21